Follow by Email

Friday, March 30, 2012

Gina Rinehart imports cheap labour

Mining magnate Gina
Rinehart intends to bring in semi-skilled migrants to work in her mines. She
doesn’t want Australian workers because our wages are too high so she’s had a
brilliant idea - bring in desperate people from other nations willing and overjoyed at the
opportunity to work for half the Australian wage. She’s trying to convince
anyone who will listen that it’s got nothing to do with profit, she’s not being
unpatriotic, she is simply suffering from an acute labour shortage.

Mining magnates

Her new Roy Hill Iron
Ore project is currently negotiating with the Government on Australia's first
Enterprise Migration Agreement (EMA). It’s all very hush hush but her plan is
to bring in around 1,500 semi skilled migrants such as scaffolders, riggers,
bulldozer drivers etc. There are thousands of young unemployed people able to fit these
job descriptions in other states who would jump on a plane in a heartbeat
if only given the opportunity.

But surprise
surprise, it’s already been going on and the Government supports EMAs. Immigration Minister Chris Bowen says they are important to keep big projects
moving. "We need EMAs to cut red tape for very large resources projects
which will have a very strong demand for labour," he said. "The biggest risk for
many of these projects proceeding is simply to assure people they will have the
labour for the job."

Ms Rinehart wants us
to believe that she’s a humanitarian at heart and has even written a poem about
it.

The Globe is sadly groaning with
debt, poverty and strife

And billions now are pleading to
enjoy a better life ...

Embrace multiculturalism and welcome
short term foreign workers to our shores

To benefit from the export of our
minerals and ores.

Very nice sentiments but what about us Gina?

Needless to say the
union isn’t buying it. The CMFEU's national secretary Dave Noonan said
"Gina Rinehart's proposition is that she wants to extend a hand of
care and raise up the poorer people in the developing world. Some people might
believe that but I don't," he said. A large number of workers brought
in on 457 visas to work at the Sino Iron project near Karratha have been
underpaid and are working for half the Australian rate. “The Immigration
Department has received numerous complaints about this and have been derelict in
their duty about doing anything about it.”

Fairfax news

And here’s the bottom
line - there are well over 80,000 workers in Australia already on 457 Visas and
migration expert Dr Bob Birrell says he expects at least half will stay on as
permanent migrants. "All of this is shrouded in secrecy, there
are thousands of domestic workers being precluded from gaining access to those
jobs," he said.

He worries about the reluctance to train Australian workers.
He says there has been no growth in the employment of the construction workforce over
the last two years and there’s been a downturn in employment in the eastern
states. “There are now tens of thousands of domestic workers who would
like to get access to these jobs," he said.